Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

This coffee table by Chilean studio Elemento Diseño is made of a single sheet of plywood, with the legs cut out from its corners.

Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

The two V-shaped legs slot diagonally into a cross at the centre of the table so that the whole thing can be assembled without glue.

Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

See more tables on Dezeen here.

Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

Here are a few details from Barcelona brand Quattria:


Coffee table plywood lacquered in white. Notable for being made ​​of a single board that has a pre-cut in order to be assembled easily.

Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

Environmental performance is the best definition of the coffee table VIC. In manufacturing there are few losses so that all parts are utilized to build a harmonious whole.

Table Vic by Elemento Diseño

VIC is assembled without tools.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

This desk by Japanese studio Torafu Architects looks like a doll’s house, with little windows in the walls and a pendent lamp inside.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

The hatches can be left closed for greater privacy when you need to concentrate, or opened up and used as shelves.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

There’s a round hole in the top to hold a plant pot and a matching stool includes storage space beneath the seat pad.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

The Koloro-desk was designed for plywood manufacturers Ichiro to showcase their polyester-coated plywood.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

See more stories about Torafu Architects here.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

Here’s some more information from Torafu Architects:


Ichiro-iro is a series of furniture designed for the decorative plywood maker Ichiro.

Ichiro creates in-house blends for the paints used in its polyester plywood, demonstrating a consistent dedication to supplying the right color that involves a willingness to custom-tint even single sheets.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

The concept for the ichiro-iro series is that of ‘tools for the real you’, where ‘iro’ is the Esperanto* word for‘tool’.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

The first items in the series are the koloro-desk and koloro-stool.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

‘Koloro’is also an Esperanto word, meaning color, and the koloro pieces have been designed to make optimum use of the vibrant polyester decorative plywood at which Ichiro excels.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

koloro-desk – a place to ‘nest’ at ease

The koloro-desk has windows at various locations, opening to give a more open and accessible feel while a small private room where no one can disturb you is created when closed.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

Lighting and potted plants can be added, and there are windows for displaying the occasional ornament, hooks for bags, and a cord manager allowing PC use.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

Arrange the koloro-desk to make a study for Dad, a play area for a child, a hobby space or however you like it to be.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

koloro-stool – complete with storage capacity

Designed to complement the koloro-desk, the koloro-stool is shaped like a vaulting horse, and under the soft cushioned seat is a box for storing toys and other small miscellaneous items.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

* Esperanto was devised as a common international language allowing people all over the world to communicate more easily.

Koloro-desk by Torafu Architects

H-supplies Kit by Dialoguemethod

Slideshow: Seoul studio Dialoguemethod made this stationery set by layering up birch plywood with coloured paper.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

The H-supplies Kit inlcudes holders for tape, pencils, post-it notes, paper clips and business cards.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

See more stories about stationery on Dezeen here.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

The information below is from Dialoguemethod:


H-supplies kit is started out the trouble for South Korea’s traditional paper Hanji’s new using beyond paper.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

Hanji paper has excellent lightweight and natural patterns compared to other papers.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

Hanji (1mm) and birch plywood (4mm) were repeatedly stacked. so, the product has lighter weight and durability, birch plywood has color stripe pattern on the cross section.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

“H-supplies kit” is consist of six different types of modular office equipment items: tape holder, pen holder, business card holder, cable holder, notes, deposit.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

The same production process can be applied to a wide range as well as office supplies and furniture accessories, lighting.

H-supplies kit by Dialoguemethod

Nike – Sneaker Head

L’illustrateur russe Aske Sicksystems a été invité par Nike a penser cette tête de loup en contre-plaqué appelée “Sneaker Head”. Basée sur la chaussure, cette création de l’artiste est à découvrir au Nike Store Moscou. Une série d’images et de t-shirts à découvrir dans la suite.



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ICD/ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Polygonal timber plates give this pavilion at the University of Stuttgart a skeleton like a sea urchin’s.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Top and above: photographs are by Roland Halbe

The pavilion was constructed for a biological research collaboration between the Institute for Computational Design (ICD) and the Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE), who also invited university students to take part.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Above: photograph is by Roland Halbe

Plywood sheets just 6.5mm thick were necessary to create the domed structure, which is fastened to the ground to prevent it blowing away.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Above: photograph is by Roland Halbe

The exterior plywood panels are slotted together using finger joints, in the same way as minute protrusions of a sea urchin’s shell plates notch into one another.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Photography is by ICD/ITKE, apart from where otherwise stated.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Here’s a more technical description from the researchers:


ICD/ITKE RESEARCH PAVILION 2011

In summer 2011 the Institute for Computational Design (ICD) and the Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE), together with students at the University of Stuttgart have realized a temporary, bionic research pavilion made of wood at the intersection of teaching and research. The project explores the architectural transfer of biological principles of the sea urchin’s plate skeleton morphology by means of novel computer-based design and simulation methods, along with computer-controlled manufacturing methods for its building implementation. A particular innovation consists in the possibility of effectively extending the recognized bionic principles and related performance to a range of different geometries through computational processes, which is demonstrated by the fact that the complex morphology of the pavilion could be built exclusively with extremely thin sheets of plywood (6.5 mm).

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

BIOLOGICAL SYSTEM

The project aims at integrating the performative capacity of biological structures into architectural design and at testing the resulting spatial and structural material-systems in full scale. The focus was set on the development of a modular system which allows a high degree of adaptability and performance due to the geometric differentiation of its plate components and robotically fabricated finger joints. During the analysis of different biological structures, the plate skeleton morphology of the sand dollar, a sub-species of the sea urchin (Echinoidea), became of particular interest and subsequently provided the basic principles of the bionic structure that was realized.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

The skeletal shell of the sand dollar is a modular system of polygonal plates, which are linked together at the edges by finger-like calcite protrusions. High load bearing capacity is achieved by the particular geometric arrangement of the plates and their joining system. Therefore, the sand dollar serves as a most fitting model for shells made of prefabricated elements. Similarly, the traditional finger-joints typically used in carpentry as connection elements, can be seen as the technical equivalent of the sand dollar’s calcite protrusions.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

MORPHOLOGY TRANSFER

Following the analysis of the sand dollar, the morphology of its plate structure was integrated in the design of a pavilion. Three plate edges always meet together at just one point, a principle which enables the transmission of normal and shear forces but no bending moments between the joints, thus resulting in a bending bearing but yet deformable structure.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Unlike traditional lightweight construction, which can only be applied to load optimized shapes, this new design principle can be applied to a wide range of custom geometry. The high lightweight potential of this approach is evident as the pavilion that could be built out of 6.5 mm thin sheets of plywood only, despite its considerable size. Therefore it even needed anchoring to the ground to resist wind suction loads.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Besides these constructional and organizational principles, other fundamental properties of biological structures are applied in the computational design process of the project:

Heterogeneity: The cell sizes are not constant, but adapt to local curvature and discontinuities. In the areas of small curvature the central cells are more than two meters tall, while at the edge they only reach half a meter.

Anisotropy: The pavilion is a directional structure. The cells stretch and orient themselves according to mechanical stresses.

Hierarchy: The pavilion is organized as a two-level hierarchical structure. On the first level, the finger joints of the plywood sheets are glued together to form a cell. On the second hierarchical level, a simple screw connection joins the cells together, allowing the assembling and disassembling of the pavilion. Within each hierarchical level only three plates – respectively three edges – meet exclusively at one point, therefore assuring bendable edges for both levels.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN AND ROBOTIC PRODUCTION

A requirement for the design, development and realization of the complex morphology of the pavilion is a closed, digital information loop between the project’s model, finite element simulations and computer numeric machine control. Form finding and structural design are closely interlinked. An optimized data exchange scheme made it possible to repeatedly read the complex geometry into a finite element program to analyze and modify the critical points of the model. In parallel, the glued and bolted joints were tested experimentally and the results included in the structural calculations.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

The plates and finger joints of each cell were produced with the university’s robotic fabrication system. Employing custom programmed routines the computational model provided the basis for the automatic generation of the machine code (NC-Code) for the control of an industrial seven-axis robot. This enabled the economical production of more than 850 geometrically different components, as well as more than 100,000 finger joints freely arranged in space. Following the robotic production, the plywood panels were joined together to form the cells. The assembly of the prefabricated modules was carried out at the city campus of the University of Stuttgart. All design, research, fabrication and construction work were carried out jointly by students and faculty researchers.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

The research pavilion offered the opportunity to investigate methods of modular bionic construction using freeform surfaces representing different geometric characteristics while developing two distinct spatial entities: one large interior space with a porous inner layer and a big opening, facing the public square between the University’s buildings, and a smaller interstitial space enveloped between the two layers that exhibits the constructive logic of the double layer shell.

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

PROJECT TEAM

Institute for Computational Design – Prof. AA Dipl.(Hons) Achim Menges Achim Menges
Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design – Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jan Knippers
Competence Network Biomimetics Baden-Württemberg

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

CONCEPT & PROJECT DEVELOPMENT
Oliver David Krieg, Boyan Mihaylov

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

PLANNING & REALISATION
Peter Brachat, Benjamin Busch, Solmaz Fahimian, Christin Gegenheimer, Nicola Haberbosch, Elias Kästle, Oliver David Krieg, Yong Sung Kwon, Boyan Mihaylov, Hongmei Zhai

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

SCIENTIFIC DEVELOPMENT
Markus Gabler (project management), Riccardo La Magna (structural design), Steffen Reichert (detailing), Tobias Schwinn (project management), Frédéric Waimer (structural design)

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Click above for larger image

PROJECT SPONSORS

Main sponsors: KUKA Roboter GmbH, Ochs GmbH
Sponsors: KST2 Systemtechnik GmbH, Landesbetrieb Forst Baden-Württemberg (ForstBW), Stiftungen LBBW, Leitz GmbH & Co. KG, MüllerBlaustein Holzbau GmbH, Hermann Rothfuss Bauunternehmung GmbH & Co., Ullrich & Schön GmbH, Holzhandlung Wider GmbH & Co. KG

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Click above for larger image

PROJECT DATA

Address Keplerstr. 11-17, 70174 Stuttgart
Date of completion: August 2011

ICD ITKE Research Pavilion at the University of Stuttgart

Click above for larger image

Surface: 72m²
Volume: 200m³
Material: 275 m² Birch plywood 6,5mm Sheet thickness


See also:

.

Pavilion by Alan Dempsey and Alvin HuangSwoosh Pavilion at the Architectural AssociationThe Termite Pavilion
at Pestival

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

Milan 2011: UK designer Benjamin Hubert presented this ash chair for Italian brand Casamania at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last week.

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The chair, called Maritime, is constructed from ash plywood with the curves following the grain of the timber.

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

See all our stories about Benjamin Hubert »

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

See all our stories about Milan 2011 »

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The following is from Casamania:


Benjamin Hubert x Casamania

Maritime
Inspired by traditional wooden shipbuilding techniques maritime is a solid wood range of chairs that are skinned internally with a formed plywood shell.

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The construction technique where the supports are visible on the outside allows for a distinctive design language that is in harmony with the material and production. The ribs allow for a structurally robust chair with minimum use of material.

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

Maritime is comprised from solid and laminate ash and offered as an upholstered option. To enhance the construction details the range is also offered in translucent dyed colourways.

Maritime by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania


See also:

.

Patch by
Benjamin Hubert
Roofer by
Benjamin Hubert
Pebble by
Benjamin Hubert

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

This trapezium-shaped box sitting on four slanting legs is a garden playhouse by Slovenian firm Ravnikar Potokar.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

The wooden structure is designed to be self-supporting so that it can be erected among trees without leaning on them for support.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

There is a full-height plexiglass window at one end of the tree house and tiny apertures with shutters on the sides.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Two retractable benches fold out of the walls, with a fixed bench at the back of the small inside space.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Photographs are by Andraž Kavčič, Robert Potokar, Robert Marčun.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

More tree houses on Dezeen »

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Tree House, Slovenia

This freestanding house-by-a-tree is a multipurpose wooden play structure, standing on its own construction. It can be erected close to trees that are unable to support additional weight.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

This tree house, conceived with contemporary design principles, is not modelled on any of the classic tree house forms that take their inspiration from either real houses or garden sheds.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Instead, children are offered a different understanding of shapes, new spatial experiences and new forms of play.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

The house is made of spruce plywood, protected on the exterior by a colourless nano-varnish. The roof is covered in a roofing cardboard that shields against most kinds of unfavourable weather conditions.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Furnishings are minimal, constructed from dowel pins that we made with kids one Sunday afternoon.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Designer: Robert Potokar
Co-designer: Janez Brežnik
Location: Trnovo, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Construction: Tesarstvo Kregar

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Click for larger image

Project: February 2008
Completion: first – June 2008, second -July 2009, third – October 2010
Building area: 3.5 m²


See also:

.

Outlandia by
Malcolm Fraser Architects
Treehouse by
Nicko Björn Elliott
Takasugi-an by
Terunobu Fujimori

Pilke by Tuukka Halonen for Skandium

Finnish designer Tuukka Halonen has designed a range of pendant lights made of repeated interlocking parts for design brand Skandium. (more…)

Eugene lounge chair by Stefan Diez for e15

Milan 2010: German designer Stefan Diez launched Eugene, a veneered plywood lounge chair for German brand e15, at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile last week. (more…)

FLKS by Kapteinbolt

Dutch designers Kapteinbolt have created a collapsible plywood workspace. (more…)